A blog about my landscape image making. On landscape imaging in general, bits of history and related disciplines (Architecture, Geography, Neuro Science, Philosophy and whatever happens to get my attention)

2012-12-24

2012-12-15

Allegories

"Allegory, from Greek ALLEGORÍA from ÀLLOS (other) and AGOREÌO (speak openly) description of one thing under the image of another".

"Allegories are, in the realm of thoughts, what ruins are in the realm of things" Walter Benjamin.

Sometimes ideas take form with the same suddenness of a bolt of lightning. Was looking at Tiziano's "Allegory of Prudence" and realized how complex, for us, is the interpretation of the painting, with all its implied symbolic referents. The concept of allegory was something I was up to experiment! So i made some searches and found this interesting paper written by Craig Owens and titled: "The Allegorical Impulse: Toward a Theory of Postmodernism". In this paper Owens, without many turnarounds, explicitly situates photography as an allegory making device:

Site-specific works are impermanent, installed in particular locations for limited duration, their impermanence providing the measure of their circumstantiality. Yet they are rarely dismantled but simply abandoned to nature; Smithson consistently acknowledged as part of his works the forces which erode and eventually reclaim them for nature. In this, the site-specific work becomes an emblem of transience, the ephemerality of all phenomena; it is the memento mori of the twentieth century.

Because of its impermanence, moreover, the work is frequently preserved only in photographs. This fact is crucial, for it suggests the allegorical potential of photography.

"An appreciation of the transience of things, and the concern to rescue them for eternity, is one of the strongest impulses in allegory" (*). And photography, we might add. As an allegorical art, then, photography would represent our desire to fix the transitory, the ephemeral, in a stable and stabilizing image.

In the photographs of Atget and Walker Evans, insofar as they self-consciously preserve that which threatens to disappear, that desire becomes the subject of the image.

If their photographs are allegorical, however, it is because what they offer is only a fragment, and thus affirms its own arbitrariness and contingency.

The last passage is really important to understand. For Owens It is the partiality of the frame that makes photography inherently allegoric. Not its content as it was for the pictorialist photographers at the end of the nineteenth century or some frisky setup as currently taught in fashion photography schools. Italiano / Italian

2012-12-05

Desperate socialism

It has been a long vacation. In the meanwhile I went through so many things (photo projects, research topics and art history) that it I struggle to find out a point where to start. But first things first.

The general rule in social networking - that any “how to have success over the Internet for dummies” points to - is to fulfill the desires of the public. This easily translates into the “if you want to be cheered up give em what they want”. The Roman Empire, of good memory, with his “panem et circenses” still dominates here.

This rule of “general wisdom” clashes against another rule in use in the marketing of cultural artifacts, that states that to be of value, they cannot be adapted, unless risking a heavy loss in identity (and value as well). Instead you must search out for the audience interested in it.

The first rule easily explains the “kitten’s pest” (puppies do as well) plaguing the social networks. The desire to achieve the robotic numbers that some posters have, cruelly, sieves out any attempt to cultivate an offering that may want to get beyond the levels of immense idiocy required by the like and forget compulsions.

But the Net, as much as it has always been in the material world, requires a large amount of uniqueness to generate some interest. The only way to do that is to dig deeply into one’s emotional and intellectual resources, thus projecting the individual into a land of solitude where self questioning is hard to ration with wise measure.

I suspect that this condition is making up a lot of pain among those who, more or less secretly, decided that an important goal in their life is to disseminate their own vision of the world.

Unfortunately I do not see any way out of this except to try and try again, as much as a fly does against the window’s glass.

However I’ve not spent this vacancy time just self questioning (flogging) myself, well partially I did, but also, just to measure up in the facebook arena I’ve opened a page and guess what ? I’ve called it “On Landscape” you wont need to register to visit it. The same on twitter I’ve added to my usual account - @cabrabesol - this new one @onlandscape. Even if you do not like those places you may find there some lighter works of mine.